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Also called the Cave of the Cyclops, off the coast of Thessaly in Greece, is the location of a uninhabited islet of Youra, in the Northern Sporades
It was also a archaeological site, that has evidence of human occupation through the mesolithic and late neolithic periods.

Did you know? Later material, such as roman lamps were also discovered there.
Led by Adamantios Sampson, beginning in 1992 and continuing into 1996, a team completed a digging and archaeological project
The more general purpose was to clarify the prehistoric occupation sequence in the area. There was emphasis on the pre-pottery sequences: from the late pleistocene; mesolithic, and neolithic periods.
Ceramic fragments of painted pottery dated to 6000 BC and 5500 BC were found
Other evidence of human occupation, included remain of sheep and goats.
Excavation of layers from the mesolithic period dated abundances of ash and charcoal; animal, bird, and fish bones; shells, scales, and even a human skull
In these layers, there were also tools such as millstones and grinders, fish-hooks and other tools made from bones.
They was also a small number of tools made from obsidian and siliceous rocks.
Check it out with some more neolithic architecture today!

Bibliography: Sampson, Adamantios (1998). “The Neolithic and Mesolithic Occupation of the Cave of Cyclope, Youra, Alonnessos, Greece”. The Annual of the British School at Athens. 93: 1–22. doi:10.1017/S0068245400003361. JSTOR30103781. S2CID129108607.
Patrick Quinn, Peter Day, Vassilis Kilikoglou, Edward Faber, Stella Katsarou-Tzeveleki, Adamantios Sampson, “Keeping an eye on your pots: the provenance of Neolithic ceramics from the Cave of the Cyclops, Youra, Greece” Journal of Archaeological Science 37:5:1042-1052 (2010) doi:10.1016/j.jas.2009.12.005
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